MANORS AND OTHER ESTATES.
There
was a manor of PIPE by 1135, the tenant having
been enfeoffed with 1/8 knight's fee by the bishop
of Coventry. (fn. 1) It was also known as Great Pipe,
as distinct from Little Pipe, a detached part of
the parish of St. Chad, Lichfield. (fn. 2) Held as ¼ fee
by the 1240s and assessed at 1 hide c. 1255, Pipe
remained a member of the bishop's manor of
Longdon, which in 1546 passed to the Paget
family (successively Barons Paget, earls of Uxbridge, and marquesses of Anglesey). Pipe was
still a member of Longdon manor in the 1850s. (fn. 3)
It covered Edial and Woodhouses but did not
include Burntwood, which grew up on part of
the waste of Longdon manor. (fn. 4)
The bishop's tenant in 1167, and apparently
in 1135, was Henry of Pipe, who witnessed a
deed c. 1150. (fn. 5) William of Pipe may have held
the manor in 1199. (fn. 6) Richard of Pipe held it in
1242–3 and he or another Richard in 1284–5. (fn. 7)
Sir Robert, son of Richard of Pipe, held it in
1293 and died evidently in 1306; he was a royal
commissioner and tax collector in Staffordshire
and bailiff and steward of the bishop. (fn. 8) He was
succeeded by his son Thomas Pipe (Sir Thomas
by 1311), who was summoned to a council at
Westminster in 1324 and was a royal commissioner in Staffordshire and Shropshire in 1327.
He was dead by 1329. (fn. 9)
In 1332 Pipe was held by his widow Margaret. (fn. 10) Her son James Pipe granted the manor
to her in 1334–5, and in 1337–8 she assigned it
to Sir Richard Stafford, a son by her first
husband, Edmund Stafford, Baron Stafford (d.
1308). (fn. 11) In the earlier 1340s James Pipe unsuccessfully sued Sir Richard for the manor, claiming that he had made the grant to his mother
while under age. (fn. 12) Sir Richard was M.P. for the
county in 1341, a soldier, and a diplomat. (fn. 13) He
was succeeded in 1380 by his son Edmund,
bishop of Exeter 1395–1419, keeper of the privy
seal 1389–96, and lord chancellor 1396–9 and
1401–3. (fn. 14) On Edmund's death in 1419 a life
interest in Pipe passed to his nephew Thomas
Stafford (d. 1425). (fn. 15)
The manor then passed to Edmund's great-niece Maud, wife of Thomas Stanley of Elford. (fn. 16)
On Thomas's death in 1463 their son Sir John
succeeded. Several times sheriff and M.P. for
Staffordshire, he was living at Pipe in 1458. In
1461 he settled the manor in trust for his third
wife Elizabeth and their son Humphrey, then
aged about six. (fn. 17) After Sir John's death in 1476
Humphrey's right was challenged by his half-brother John, and the dispute was settled in
Humphrey's favour in 1490–1. (fn. 18) Knighted by
Henry VII at the battle of Bosworth in 1485 and
created a banneret at the battle of Stoke in 1487,
Sir Humphrey, who lived at Pipe, was three
times sheriff and several times M.P. for Staffordshire. He died in 1504 and was buried in
Westminster Abbey. (fn. 19) His son and heir John,
who also lived at Pipe, died in 1514, leaving two
infant daughters and coheirs, Elizabeth and Isabel. (fn. 20)
By 1522 Elizabeth was the wife of Sir John
Hercy of Grove (Notts.) and Isabel of Walter
Moyle of Buckwell in Boughton Aluph (Kent).
Each couple had a moiety of Pipe. Isabel died
there, and her husband held the moiety until his
death in 1558. Their daughter Mary married
Erasmus Heveningham of Heveningham (Suff.).
Erasmus died in 1559, evidently at Pipe Hall,
and on Mary's death her son Christopher Heveningham succeeded to the moiety. In 1565 Sir
John Hercy and Elizabeth conveyed the other
moiety to Christopher and his wife Dorothy.
Christopher Heveningham died at his manor of
Aston, in Stone, in 1574 and was succeeded by
his son Walter, a minor. (fn. 21) Walter, who was
sheriff in 1609–10 and was knighted in 1619,
died at Pipe Hall in 1636. (fn. 22) His heir was his
grandson Walter Heveningham. (fn. 23) Pipe had been
sequestrated by 1648 because of the younger
Walter's Roman Catholicism, and Robert Pargiter of Greatworth (Northants.) then stated that
he had bought the manor from Walter. (fn. 24) In 1658
Walter was described as of Pipe Hall. (fn. 25) He lived
at both Pipe and Aston and died in 1691. (fn. 26)
Under a settlement of 1691 Pipe passed to his
daughter Bridget and her husband Sir James
Simeon, Bt., of Brightwell Baldwin (Oxon.). (fn. 27)
The settlement replaced one of 1688 in favour of
Walter's nephew Christopher Heveningham,
who received instead an annuity of £50 and
unsuccessfully challenged Sir James's right. (fn. 28)
Bridget died in 1692 and Sir James in 1709. He
was succeeded by his son Edward, who died
unmarried in 1768. (fn. 29) Pipe passed to his greatnephew Edward Weld of Lulworth Castle
(Dors.), who was succeeded by his brother
Thomas in 1775. (fn. 30) In 1800 Thomas sold the
manor to Samuel Pipe Wolferstan of Statfold, a
distant relative who claimed descent from Sir
Richard Stafford. (fn. 31) Samuel was succeeded in
1820 by his son Stanley, who sold Pipe Hall
farm, 226 a. in 1844, to S. P. Shawe of Maple
Hayes in 1859. (fn. 32) Stanley Pipe Wolferstan's son
Francis, who succeeded in 1867, sold Pipe
manor to Shawe's son and heir Henry in 1868. (fn. 33)
In 1884 Henry sold much of the Maple Hayes
estate, including Pipe manor and Pipe Hall
farm, to A. O. Worthington, and on Worthington's death in 1918 the manor and farm passed
to his son William, who died in 1949. The farm
was still part of the Maple Hayes estate in
1986. (fn. 34)
The lord of the manor surnamed of Pipe in
the mid 12th century presumably had a house
there, and in 1299 Sir Robert Pipe dated a deed
from Pipe. (fn. 35) In 1371 the bishop licensed the
performance of a marriage in the chapel within
the manor of Pipe, presumably a chapel in the
manor house. (fn. 36) The hall of Pipe was mentioned
in 1436. (fn. 37) Walter Heveningham was assessed for
tax on 15 hearths there in 1666. (fn. 38) By the earlier
1690s Pipe Hall was occupied as a farmhouse by
the Bates family, still the tenants in 1778 and
probably in 1781. (fn. 39) It was rebuilt c. 1770, (fn. 40) and
in the early 19th century there were minor
extensions and some internal remodelling. Two
rooms on the first floor appear to have been once
connected by an open arcade of three arches,
and they probably formed the Roman Catholic
chapel in use until 1800. (fn. 41) North-west of the
house are timber-framed farm buildings whose
walls have been much undercut in brick; they
include a 17th-century barn.
An estate at Pipe in 1167 was described as the
land of three canons. (fn. 42) It may have been the land
given to the canons and lay brothers of Farewell
by Bishop Clinton c. 1140. Soon afterwards the
bishop made a grant, probably of the same
estate, to the nuns of Farewell at the request of
three hermits and brothers. The grant included
land at Pipe. Henry II, probably in 1155,
confirmed the nuns in their possession of a
carucate of land at Pipe assarted from Cannock
forest. (fn. 43) That may be the origin of the ABNALLS estate which was within the nuns'
manor of Farewell by the early 14th century.
When the priory was suppressed in 1527, its
estates included land at Ashmore Brook, Pipe,
Abnalls, and Burntwood. Later in 1527 the
Crown granted the priory's possessions to the
dean and chapter of Lichfield, who in 1550
granted Farewell manor to William, Lord Paget. (fn. 44)
A house and virgate at Abnalls were held of
Farewell priory by Roger of Abnall (Abenhale)
in 1318 or 1319, (fn. 45) probably in succession to
Thomas of Abnall who was a tenant of the
priory in the earlier 1290s. (fn. 46) Roger was still alive
in 1327 but had probably been succeeded by
Amy (or Amice) of Abnall by 1333. (fn. 47) In 1357
the estate, consisting of a messuage, a mill, a
carucate, and other land in Abnalls, Pipe, Elmhurst, and Lichfield, was held by Nicholas Taverner, described as parson of Stretton. (fn. 48) Probably by 1378 a house and ½ virgate in Abnalls
had passed from him to Aymer Taverner, a
prominent citizen of Lichfield also known as
Aymer Lichfield. (fn. 49) Aymer probably died in
1399. (fn. 50) The Abnalls estate was held in the early
15th century by William Newport, who made it
his home. He was knighted in 1400 and was
three times sheriff and three times M.P. for the
county. (fn. 51) He evidently died in 1415 or 1416, and
Abnalls passed to Sir William Lichfield, Aymer's heir and kinsman, who was living there in
1417. (fn. 52) In 1421 he made a settlement of what
was called the manor of Abnalls. (fn. 53) The manor
then descended with his share of Freeford,
passing in 1537 to the Wingfield family. (fn. 54) The
Wingfields conveyed the manor in 1566 to Sir
Edward Littleton of Pillaton, in Penkridge, (fn. 55)
who at his death in 1574 was holding it of
Thomas, Lord Paget, as of the manor of Farewell. (fn. 56) The Wingfields retained some property
in Abnalls which passed with their Freeford
estate to Jane Kniveton c. 1600. (fn. 57) In 1609 Sir
Edward Littleton's son Sir Edward conveyed a
house and land in Great and Little Abnalls and
elsewhere in the area to Thomas Sprott of
Ashmore Brook, whose family had held another
house and land at Abnalls at least since the
earlier 16th century. (fn. 58)
Abnalls then descended with the Ashmore
Brook estate until the earlier 19th century. It
appears then to have been divided, part becoming the home farm of Maple Hayes (fn. 59) and part
being sold to Thomas Smith of Lichfield, probably in the 1830s. In 1844 his devisees owned a
56–3. farm centring on Abnalls Cottage on the
north side of Abnalls Lane. (fn. 60) That house was
rebuilt in 1848. (fn. 61) It was the home of William
Gresley, prebendary of Wolvey in Lichfield
cathedral, in the earlier 1850s, (fn. 62) and in the mid
1850s R. C. Chawner moved there from Wall,
remaining until his death in 1870. His widow
and daughter lived there until about the mid
1880s, when they moved to Edial House. (fn. 63) By
the later 1880s it was the home of H. C. Hodson,
diocesan registrar from 1878, who became noted
for his kennels of pure-bred bloodhounds there.
He died in 1924; Mrs. E. M. R. Hodson lived
there in the 1930s. (fn. 64) The house was divided into
two in 1948. (fn. 65) The medieval house may have
occupied the moated site on the south side of
Abnalls Lane just inside the Lichfield city
boundary. (fn. 66)
An estate in ASHMORE BROOK held by
Thomas of Hamstead (d. by 1254) was probably
that held of the bishop in 1298 by another
Thomas of Hamstead as 1/8 knight's fee. It was
later held by Nicholas of Hamstead. (fn. 67) It eventually passed to Roger Fordiave, who was
succeeded in 1420 or 1421 by his daughter Mar
garet and her husband John Sprott; the inheritance included four messuages in the area which
were held of Farewell priory. (fn. 68) In 1510 Ashmore
Brook was the home of Thomas Sprott, who
died in 1531 and was then serjeant of Lichfield
cathedral. He held what was described as a
capital messuage at Ashmore Brook of the
bishop as 1/8 knight's fee, along with three messuages in Abnalls, Burntwood, and Hammerwich
and other property in the area. He was succeeded by his son Edward. (fn. 69) In 1571 Edward
was living in the capital messuage, which had an
estate of 85 a. attached to it; he had a second
house at Ashmore Brook with 74 a. attached.
Both were held of the former episcopal manor of
Longdon, and he held two other houses in the
area, one of them at Abnalls, as tenant of Farewell manor. (fn. 70) Edward died in 1591. (fn. 71) His heir
was his son Roger, who was living at Ashmore
Brook in 1598. (fn. 72) Thomas Sprott, probably
Roger's son, had the estate in 1604, and he was
succeeded by his nephew Thomas, evidently by
1611; Thomas had already acquired the nearby
Bilston Brook farm in 1605. (fn. 73) He died in 1655,
having made a settlement in 1654 at the time of
the marriage of his grandson and heir Henry
Sprott to Ann, daughter and heir of Thomas
Lokier of the Marsh, in Barrow (Salop.). Ashmore Brook House, the capital messuage, was
settled on Henry for life with remainder to Ann
for life as jointure. The second house at Ashmore Brook was settled for life on Henry's
mother Dorothy Saunders, who was the remarried widow of Thomas's son Edward, killed at
the battle of Marston Moor in 1644. (fn. 74) Henry
died in 1673 with a son Thomas as his heir; his
widow Ann lived until 1721. Thomas was succeeded in 1710 by his son Henry, who lived at
the Marsh and died in 1744 with his brother
Samuel, a physician of Ludlow, as his heir. (fn. 75)
Samuel Sprott died in 1760, and the Ashmore
Brook estate passed to Henry's three daughters,
Ann the wife of James Moseley, Elizabeth the
wife of William Toldervy, and Dorothy the wife
of John Ashwood. Ann Moseley's heir was her
son Walter, of Leaton in Bobbington, who also
succeeded Elizabeth Toldervy under her will of
1794. Dorothy's share passed on her death in
1783 to her daughter Dorothy, who married Sir
Henry Hawley of Leybourne Grange (Kent)
and also died in 1783, leaving a son Henry; her
husband continued to hold her share of Ashmore Brook by the courtesy. (fn. 76)
In 1812 Walter Moseley, Sir Henry Hawley,
and Henry Hawley sold Ashmore Brook House,
his other house at Ashmore Brook, and Abnall
House (so named by 1654) to John Atkinson of
Maple Hayes; the property was subject to payments to the lord of Longdon. (fn. 77) Atkinson sold
Ashmore Brook House in 1838 to Richard
Hinckley and Maryanne Woodhouse, both of
Beacon House, Lichfield. Hinckley bought his
share for the benefit of his wife Ellen, Maryanne's sister, to whom the other share passed on
Maryanne's death in 1843. (fn. 78) In 1844 the farm
attached to the house covered 159 a. (fn. 79) Hinckley
died in 1865, and on Ellen's death in 1870 what
was then known as Ashmore Brook farm passed
to her granddaughter Ellen, the wife of the
Revd. F. W. Vernon of Hilton. She died in
1899, and her trustees sold the farm to A. O.
Worthington of Maple Hayes. (fn. 80) It was still part
of the Maple Hayes estate in 1986. (fn. 81)
Ashmore Brook Farm consists of a late-medieval central range with a cross wing at
either end. The central range was originally a
two-bayed open hall. A chimney stack and an
upper floor were inserted in the earlier 17th
century. In 1666 Henry Sprott was assessed for
tax on eight hearths in the house. (fn. 82) The service
cross wing at the west end was reconstructed in
the 18th century, a staircase being built into the
angle between its southward projection and the
hall range. The wing was extended northwards
in the 19th century. The eastern cross wing,
which includes another staircase, was rebuilt
early in the 19th century and remodelled later in
the century. Most of the external timber walling
has been rebuilt in brick. The house originally
stood within a moat fed by Ashmore brook,
three sides of which survived in the 1840s. (fn. 83)
The second house, on the opposite side of the
road, had a 216-a. farm attached in 1795. (fn. 84) The
site of the house, which was moated, was a
detached portion of Curborough and Elmhurst
until 1879. (fn. 85) The farm was owned and occupied
by Thomas Worthington in 1844 when it
covered 48 a. (fn. 86) By 1861 it was occupied by
William Taylor, who sold it c. 1890 to Thomas
Bailye. In 1982 Bailye's grandson Kenneth Bailye sold the house to Ian Herman, who in turn
sold it to J. W. L. Fielding in 1985. Mr. Bailye
moved to the nearby Rowan Cottage, which
then became the farmhouse for what had become known as Ashmore Brook Dairy farm. (fn. 87)
The former farmhouse, known as Ashmore
Brook House in 1987, is a brick house of three
storeys, which was described in 1795 as just
erected. (fn. 88) Its main front faces south, and there is
a back service wing. The south arm of the moat,
fed by Ashmore brook, survives.
In 1680 EDIAL HALL was the home of
Thomas Hammond, who was junior bailiff of
Lichfield in 1679–80, senior bailiff in 1685–6,
and mayor in 1686–7. In 1702 he had a small
estate adjoining the hall and property elsewhere,
including Lichfield. He was succeeded that year
by his son Thomas. (fn. 89) In 1716 the younger
Thomas sold the hall to William Fettiplace
Nott, husband of his sister Sarah and steward of
Lichfield from 1699 until his death in 1726. (fn. 90)
His heir was his son Fettiplace, senior bailiff of
Lichfield in 1752–3 and 1759–60 and steward
1762–9; he died in 1775. (fn. 91) The hall was occupied as a school by Samuel Johnson c. 1736 and
was advertised for letting in 1750; it was occupied by Thomas Ashmole in 1773. (fn. 92) In his will
Fettiplace directed that the hall should be sold
with other property to meet his legacies and the
debts of his son, another Fettiplace. (fn. 93) In 1776 or
1777 the hall and the adjoining farm were
bought by Benjamin Robinson, who sold them
in 1779 to John Fern, a Lichfield wine merchant. (fn. 94) In 1801 Fern was succeeded in the Edial
property and in the wine business by his son
Robert. (fn. 95) By 1806 Robert was bankrupt, and his
assignees that year conveyed the hall and farmhouse to Richard Greenhough, a Lichfield
maltster. (fn. 96) The hall was the home of the Revd.
E. P. Waters by 1805, and he was running a
school there in 1807. (fn. 97) The hall was demolished
in 1809. (fn. 98)
In 1811 Greenhough sold the property to two
brothers, Henry and Francis Styche. (fn. 99) It was
probably the same Henry Styche who in 1834
was living at what was called Edial Hall and was
farming there in 1841. (fn. 100) By 1851 he had been
succeeded by his son Henry; the farm was 29 a.
in extent in 1844. (fn. 101) The younger Henry, who
was unmarried, was succeeded c. 1870 by John
Styche, who farmed at Edial Hall until c. 1880. (fn. 102)
In 1896 the farm, then of 22 a., was bought by
Daniel Hulme. (fn. 103) John Mayer was farming there
in 1916 and 1933, but the farm was owned by
George Mayer of the Chetwynd Arms at Brocton, in Baswich. Under the terms of his will it
was put up for sale in 1933. (fn. 104) In 1978 it was
bought by Harry Wharmby and his wife, who
also owned the Angel Croft hotel in Lichfield. (fn. 105)
The building demolished in 1809 was a double-pile brick house surmounted by a cupola; it
dated from c. 1700. (fn. 106) The present Edial Hall,
formerly Edial Hall Farm, is a brick house of the
earlier 18th century with two bays of a 17th-century roof at its western end. It was presumably the farmhouse described in 1779 as 'adjoining and being heretofore part of Edial Hall. (fn. 107)
There was still a tradition in the Styche family
in the earlier 20th century that when the family
bought the property in 1811 the living quarters
of the hall had recently been demolished and
that what then stood had been used mainly as
servants' quarters and harness rooms. (fn. 108) Two
ranges of timber-framed farm buildings survive;
they date probably from the 17th century,
though they were underbuilt and extended in
brick in the 19th century.
The house known as EDIAL HOUSE
FARM by 1896 (fn. 109) dates from the early 19th
century, but an estate centring on an earlier
house existed by the 17th century and probably
by the 16th: in 1571 Fabian Orme of Overton
Grange in Hammerwich held a house and land
in Edial called Stokehay, a name preserved in
Stockhay Lane south-west of Edial House farm.
The estate descended with Overton Grange
until 1628 when George Orme sold it to Simon
Jasson of Lichfield. (fn. 110) Simon was living at Edial
when he died in 1653. (fn. 111) His heir was his son
Simon, who in 1656 bought a second house and
more land at Edial from Humphrey Anson; that
was the only house mentioned in his will of
1667. (fn. 112) He was assessed for tax on six hearths at
Edial in 1666. (fn. 113) Simon died in 1667 or 1668 with
a son Sebastian, a minor, as his heir. (fn. 114) Sebastian
had moved from Edial to Walcot, in Charlbury
(Oxon.), by 1704. (fn. 115) He died in 1710 or 1711,
leaving two houses and land in Edial to his
nephew Sebastian Jasson, then a minor but of
age by 1716. (fn. 116) The younger Sebastian, who was
living at Hill Top in Pipehill by 1718, sold the
two houses and the land attached in 1721 to
Theophilus Levett, town clerk of Lichfield from
1721 until his death in 1746. (fn. 117)
Levett's heir was his son John, who died
unmarried in 1799. His Edial property evidently
passed to his brother, the Revd. Richard Levett,
and on Richard's death in 1802 to the next
brother, Thomas, of Packington Hall in Weeford. (fn. 118) In that year Thomas owned a 107–a. farm
in Edial. (fn. 119) He died in 1820 with a son Theophilus
as his heir. Theophilus was succeeded in 1839
by his son John, who owned the house and
157 a. in 1841. (fn. 120) John was succeeded in 1853 by
his son Theophilus and he in 1899 by his son
Basil, whose brother Berkeley succeeded in
1929. (fn. 121) In 1937 Berkeley sold the farm to J. E.
Hammersley. (fn. 122) F. Hammersley was farming
there in 1962. (fn. 123) In 1987 the farm was owned by
Mr. E. Howdle.
Thomas Bird of Lichfield and his wife Isabel
probably held a house at FULFEN in the early
16th century: besides a house their holding in
Longdon manor consisted of 48 a. in Burntwood
called 'Fulfennes' and a plot recently taken from
the waste between Fulfen and the heath. Isabel
was the daughter and heir of a branch of the
Bird family living at Ashmore Brook. The house
had formerly been held by Henry Bytheway and
later by John Verror, while Fulfennes had been
held by David Bird and later by Agnes Bird. (fn. 124)
A house, a cottage, and land at Fulfen were
conveyed in 1537 by John Leeke to Humphrey
Cotton and his wife Anne. (fn. 125) A Humphrey Cotton held a house and pasture in Fulfen and
Childerhay in 1571 and was still alive in 1577. (fn. 126)
William Cotton had succeeded by 1597 and was
living at Fulfen in 1602. (fn. 127) A Thomas Cotton was
living in Burntwood in 1609. (fn. 128) Another William
Cotton was occupying a house called Fulfen in
1664 and was assessed for tax on three hearths in
Burntwood in 1666. (fn. 129) He died in 1669 or 1670
with an infant son William as his heir. (fn. 130)
The estate later passed to George Ball, whose
son Richard succeeded in 1717 or 1718 to what
was then called Fulfin House. (fn. 131) In 1765 the
house and estate were held by Elizabeth Ball of
Castle Bromwich (Warws.). She died unmarried
in 1769 with her cousin James Birch as her heir.
He was succeeded by his son George, and he by
his son Thomas, who added Reynardson to his
surname on the death of his father-in-law in
1812. As Maj.-Gen. Thomas Birch Reynardson
he held the Fulfen estate in 1821. (fn. 132) In 1844 it
was a 103–a. farm. (fn. 133)
Reynardson died in 1847, and in 1848 his
widow Etheldred Anne sold Fulfin House to
John Mann of Cleat Hill in Longdon. (fn. 134) By 1851
it was occupied by John Tudor, who had moved
there from a farm in Church Road and farmed at
Fulfen until his death c. 1872; his son Charles
was farming 179 a. there in 1881. (fn. 135) The
property was later owned by J. T. Kent, who
was farming there by the 1920s and from whom
it was compulsorily purchased in 1946 for St.
Matthew's hospital. The land was farmed by the
hospital authorities, but the house was left unoccupied. In 1951 the Ministry of Health sold the
house and 17 a. to J. R. Fletcher, a Burntwood
butcher, whose widow Mrs. M. Fletcher sold
the house in 1984 to Mr. and Mrs. M. J.
Hogan. (fn. 136)
The main block of the house known as Fulfin
is of two bays and probably dates from the 16th
century. It was originally timber framed and
jettied on all four sides; there are also remains of
two first-floor oriel windows. It seems too small
to have been the house occupied by the Cotton
family in the 16th and 17th centuries. Positioned
on a hill on the edge of Cannock Chase, it may
have been built as a hunting lodge or a standing
from which spectators could watch the hunting.
In the 17th century a chimney stack was built
around the central truss, and in the 18th century
a short brick wing was added on the north side.
A little later the main block was cased in brick
and much of the timber walling was removed.
The wing was extended along the whole of the
north side in the 19th century.
The house known as HILL HOUSE or HILL
FARM by the later 18th century was owned in
1742 with an attached farm by John Dyott of
Lichfield. By 1769 it had passed to his nephew
Simon Dyott of Birmingham. (fn. 137) Simon was still
alive in 1771, but by 1778 he had been succeeded by his son Joseph, a London factor. (fn. 138)
Joseph sold the farm in 1784 to John Barker, a
Birmingham brassfounder. (fn. 139) Barker sold it in
1800 to Thomas Ashmall of Farewell Hall. (fn. 140) On
Ashmall's death in 1802 the farm passed to his
son John, who died in 1839. In his will John
directed that Hill farm should be sold, and in
1841 it was bought by James Palmer, who added
to it his adjoining farm at Little Pipe. (fn. 141) Palmer
died in 1850, having directed that his property
was to be sold for the benefit of his son and two
daughters. The original part of Hill farm was
sold in 1854 to S. P. Shawe of Maple Hayes,
who bought the Little Pipe portion also in
1855. (fn. 142) In 1890 his son Henry sold the 212-a.
Hill farm to A. O. Worthington of Maple Hayes,
and in 1986 the farm was still part of the Maple
Hayes estate. (fn. 143)
The house dates from the 18th century and
originally consisted of a three-bayed block facing south and a low rear wing. In the earlier 19th
century the wing was enlarged and heightened
to three storeys and another wing was added on
the east. The entrance was moved to the east
front of the east wing.
MAPLE HAYES
MAPLE HAYES takes its name from land
called 'Mabbley hays' which by 1498 was divided into four crofts, one of them in Pipe
park. (fn. 144) By 1728 a farm called Pipe or Maple
Hayes farm was owned by William Jesson of
Lichfield. (fn. 145) A Mr. Jasson had been assessed for
poor rate on 'Mapel Hey' in 1674, (fn. 146) but it is not
clear whether that was a farm or simply a piece
of land. There appears to have been a farm by
the early 18th century: a Robert Watson was
living at Maple Hayes in 1704 and a Robert
Beardmore in 1724. (fn. 147)
William Jesson died in 1732, (fn. 148) and his
property was divided between his two sisters,
Elizabeth, the wife of Fowke Hussey of Little
Wyrley in Norton Canes, and Anna Maria, the
wife of Thomas Mason of Newcastle under
Lyme. In 1735 Elizabeth settled the reversion of
her share on her daughter Sybilla, who in 1783,
with her husband Thomas Ware Cooper, sold it
to her nephew, Phineas Hussey. (fn. 149) The other half
was held in 1750 by Thomas Mason, Anna
Maria having died; the reversion lay with their
son Jesson, who had succeeded by 1772. (fn. 150) In
1785 Phineas Hussey and Jesson Mason made
an exchange whereby Mason secured the whole
of Maple Hayes farm. (fn. 151) He sold it in 1786 to
George Addams, a Lichfield wine merchant. (fn. 152)
Addams had rebuilt the house by 1796, but he
sold the estate in 1804 to John Atkinson of Bank
House, Manchester. (fn. 153)
Atkinson was living at Maple Hayes by 1812,
and he built up a collection of paintings and
other works of art there. (fn. 154) He was sheriff of
Staffordshire in 1828–9. (fn. 155) He let the house in
1834, and in 1838 he was living in Boulogne. (fn. 156)
In 1839 he sold the freehold portion of the
estate, including the house, to Sir Thomas Fremantle, Bt., of Swanbourne (Bucks.), later
Baron Cottesloe; the leasehold portion was
bought by Sir James Fitzgerald, Bt., of Wolseley
Hall in Colwich, husband of Sir Thomas Fremantle's sister Augusta. (fn. 157) Sir James died later in
1839, and Maple Hayes became Augusta's home
until the later 1840s. (fn. 158) In 1851 she and her
brother sold the house and 180 a. to Samuel Pole
Shawe of Hints Hall, who moved to Maple
Hayes and considerably enlarged the estate. (fn. 159)
He died in 1862, leaving the estate to his third
wife Mary for life with reversion to his son by
his second marriage, Henry Cunliffe Shawe.
Mary continued to live at Maple Hayes until her
death in 1882. (fn. 160)
In 1884 Henry, then of Weddington Hall
(Warws.), sold the house and 455 a. of the 1,010-a. estate to Albert Octavius Worthington, a
partner in the Burton upon Trent brewing firm
of Worthington & Co. (fn. 161) He continued to buy
property in the area, including more of the
Maple Hayes estate in 1885 and 1890. (fn. 162) He was
succeeded in 1918 by his son William Worthington Worthington, who died in 1949 with a
grandson and minor, Charles Worthington, as
his heir. (fn. 163) Most of the estate, c. 1,540 a., was
sold in 1950 to a trust, which still owned c.
1,400 a. in 1986. (fn. 164) The house was bought with
24 a. by Staffordshire county council in 1951
and opened as a boarding annexe for Lichfield
grammar school in 1953. (fn. 165) In 1981 the house
and land were bought by Dr. E. N. Brown, who
opened a school for dyslexic children there in
1982. (fn. 166) The home farm in Abnalls Lane, which
included the site of Darwin's botanic garden,
was sold in 1951 to Capt. T. W. Matthews and
bought from him in 1978 by Mr. E. J. Foster. (fn. 167)
The house originally consisted of a three-storeyed central block of five bays facing east
and flanked by recessed single-storeyed wings of
three bays. In 1802 it had a hall, dining parlour,
drawing room, breakfast parlour, kitchen, and
butler's pantry on the ground floor, five chambers on the first floor, and six attics. (fn. 168) It was
enlarged by A. O. Worthington. In 1884–5 each
wing was raised to two storeys and given a
canted bay window on the east front. (fn. 169) In 1895 a
new block was added at the south-west corner to
house a library and a billiard room. (fn. 170) The long
two- and three-storeyed service range on the
north side is also late 19th-century. (fn. 171) After W.
W. Worthington's succession in 1918 (fn. 172) the principal rooms on the east front were fitted with
panelling in an early 18th-century style; the
room on the north-west corner was given rich
18th-century-style plasterwork. Parkland survives to the south and east with a boundary belt
and the southern part of a string of ornamental
pools. (fn. 173)
The great tithes were commuted in 1844 for
the following rent charges: to the Ecclesiastical
Commissioners £343 in respect of the prebend
of Weeford in Lichfield cathedral, £19 0s. 7d. in
respect of the prebend of Pipa Minor, £13 8s.
11½ d. in respect of the prebends of Hansacre and
Freeford, and £2 16s. in respect of the prebend
of Gaia Minor; to the dean and chapter £4 9s.
8d. in respect of the prebend of Stotfold appropriated to them in 1803; to the Revd. J. A.
Cotton £1 7s. in respect of the 5-a. Hobstone
Piece; and to Stanley Pipe Wolferstan of Statfold £3 in respect of 20 a. owned by himself.
The small tithes were held by the vicar of St.
Mary's, Lichfield, to whom they had been
granted by Bishop Lloyd in 1694; they were
commuted for a rent charge of £132 15s. Parts of
the area were partially or completely exempt
from tithe, in some cases in return for a prescriptive payment. (fn. 174)
In 1311 John de la Bourne, a chaplain, and
Reynold le Bedel of Lichfield received royal
licence to grant St. John's hospital in Lichfield
10½ a. and £10 rent in Lichfield and Pipe. Adam
Eton and John Wilmot, chaplains, granted it
property in Pipe in 1349. (fn. 175) In 1844 the hospital
owned 82 a. in Burntwood, including a 14-a.
farm at Hilltop. (fn. 176) In 1921 what was called
Hilltop farm, covering 21 a., was sold to W. W.
Worthington (fn. 177) and became part of the Maple
Hayes estate. The farmhouse, which was derelict in 1986, dates from the early 17th century. It
is timber framed, but the walls have been infilled
or replaced with brick and stone. It has a three-roomed plan, with an internal stack which has an
ovolo-moulded fireplace surround. The roof was
renewed in the 19th century.
The vicars choral of Lichfield cathedral
owned land in Edial and Woodhouses in 1535. (fn. 178)
In 1844 they owned a scattered estate of 42 a. in
the area. (fn. 179) They transferred all their property
outside the Close to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners in 1872. (fn. 180)
The property of St. Radegund's chantry,
founded in the cathedral in 1242, formed a
manor which by 1338 included a capital messuage in Pipe called Mossland. Half the messuage
was then held by Richard Fordiave, but by 1357
the whole was held by Adam Eyton, chaplain,
who had conveyed it to Richard Arley by 1359. (fn. 181)
William Kynchall held a plot of land in Pipe of
the chantry in 1357. (fn. 182) In 1461 the chantry's
property included three messuages and land in
Edial; it had a messuage and land in Edial and a
messuage and land in Woodhouses in 1482. (fn. 183) By
the 1530s the estate in the area seems to have
consisted only of land in Moss field in Edial. (fn. 184)
The chantry's property sold by the Crown to
two London speculators in 1549 included rents
totalling 4s. 5d. from six holdings in Edial. (fn. 185)
They were sold to William, Lord Paget, in
1550. (fn. 186) In 1571 six tenants held of Thomas,
Lord Paget, 18 a. in Moss field which had
formerly belonged to the chantry. (fn. 187)
In the early 16th century St. Catherine's
chantry in the cathedral owned 1 a. in Kynchall
moor in the Edial area. (fn. 188)
The endowments of the Holy Trinity chantry
in Longdon church, founded in 1528, included
rent from lands in Edial and Woodhouses. It
was sold by the Crown to speculators in 1571. (fn. 189)
ECONOMIC HISTORY.
Agricultutre.
Several open fields lay around Woodhouses and
Edial. Pipe field on the east, mentioned in 1358,
adjoined Edial Lane (the Lichfield road) and
extended into Pipehill. It was still an open field
in 1705. (fn. 190) Woodhouses field was bounded by
Woodhouses Road and Grange Lane. Mentioned in 1519, it had evidently been divided by
1578 when Woodhouses Great field was recorded; Little field, an open field adjoining it
and also bounded by Grange Lane, was recorded between 1608 and 1663. (fn. 191) Great field
contained closes by the mid 18th century and
was finally inclosed in 1777. (fn. 192) Moss field at Edial
adjoined Woodhouses Great field. Mentioned in
1462, it was still an open field in 1608 but had
been inclosed by the 1690s. (fn. 193)
Ashmore Brook had its own open fields. 'Le
Rudyng' there, evidently an assart, contained
selions in 1342. (fn. 194) In 1426 John Sprott took
possession of a headland in Ashmore Brook
field; its bounds included John's furlong called
Twentylands. (fn. 195) In the later 16th century the
Sprotts' Ashmore Brook estate included 2 a. in
Twentylands field and 2 a. in Middle field. (fn. 196)
Earlier in the century the family claimed right of
way across the two fields when going between
Ashmore Brook and Longdon. About 1540
Edward Sprott complained that Thomas Bilston
of Longdon Way had inclosed one of the fields,
thus forcing him to make a long detour. Bilston
complained that Sprott had broken down his
hedges and driven an ox cart across his land. (fn. 197)
Thomas Sprott's estate at Ashmore Brook in
1654 included land called the Great Twentylands. (fn. 198)
A survey of 1298 recorded 300 a. of common
pasture in Burntwood. (fn. 199) One of 1597 recorded a
heath of 800 a. in Burntwood and Hammerwich
where the freeholders and copyholders of Longdon, Burntwood, Hammerwich, Ashmore
Brook, Farewell, Childerhay, Edial, and Woodhouses had grazing rights. (fn. 200) Piecemeal inclosure of the waste was in progress by the mid
12th century when assarted land in Pipe formed
part of Farewell priory's estate. (fn. 201) There was
assarting at Ashmore Brook in the mid 13th
century. (fn. 202) In 1298 two plots of 'new land' in the
wood of 'Pipemore' (one of 4 a. and one of 10 a.)
were held of the bishop, with four more in
'Kinghalemore' (one of ½ a., two of 1½ a., and
one of 2¼ a. (fn. 203) In the later 16th century there was
extensive inclosure of parcels of waste for arable
and for building cottages. (fn. 204) None the less a large
area of heath survived in the western part of the
township until the later 19th century. In 1861
the remaining 1,840 a. of common were inclosed
under an Act of 1857. (fn. 205)
Of the bishop's nine free tenants at Pipe in
1298, only the prior of St. John's hospital in
Lichfield owed labour services, which consisted
of carriage of mill stones and could be commuted for a payment of 6d. Four neifs and a
cottar held land in Pipe; the neifs owed the same
services as those of Streethay and Morughale,
and the cottar owed carriage of mill stones. (fn. 206) In
the earlier 17th century Sir Walter Heveningham exacted labour services as lord of Pipe. In
leases between 1625 and 1635 he specified from
one to twelve days' work a year, including
ploughing, carting, and harvesting, to be done
within a given distance of Pipe or Edial at two
days' notice. (fn. 207)
Barley, oats, and rye were being grown on a
farm at Woodhouses in 1605, and barley,
French wheat and barley, peas, and oats on a
farm in Norton Lane in 1653. (fn. 208) Corn, barley,
peas, oats, and beans were recorded on farms in
Burntwood in the later 1670s. (fn. 209) A turnip field in
Woodhouses was mentioned in 1777. (fn. 210) The main
crops in the township in the late 1860s were
turnips, barley, and wheat. (fn. 211) The machinery at
Hill farm north of Woodhouses in 1871 included
a turnip slicer and a turnip pulper, while in 1874
the 240-a. Bridge Cross farm south-east of
Chase Terrace was growing turnips and barley. (fn. 212)
Potatoes too were grown: potato setting in the
spring and picking in the autumn caused extensive absenteeism among the boys at the Colliery
school in Chasetown from its early days in the
1860s. (fn. 213) In 1984 the main crops in Burntwood
parish were barley (161. 8 ha. officially recorded), wheat (66.1 ha.), and potatoes (28.4
ha.). (fn. 214)
There was a market gardener living at Woodhouses in 1851. (fn. 215) James Hastilow of Castle farm
was listed as a market gardener in the 1860s. (fn. 216)
Four market gardeners were recorded in
Burntwood in 1870, one of them also the landlord of the Nag's Head at Fulfen, and there was
another at Chasetown. (fn. 217) Horticulture accounted
for 3.2 ha. in Burntwood parish in 1984. Most of
it was concerned with fruit: 2 ha. were devoted
to strawberries and 1 ha. to raspberries,
blackcurrants, gooseberries, and other small
fruit. Vegetables were grown on the remaining
0.2 ha. (fn. 218)
Sheep, mentioned in the Pipe area in 1503, (fn. 219)
were evidently important by then. In 1537 the
holder of the Fulfen estate had common of
pasture for 300 sheep as well as 200 cattle on
Cannock Chase and in 'Luffule' wood and
Pipe. (fn. 220) On a farm at Woodhouses in 1605 there
were 80 wethers and hogs and 16 ewes and
lambs, valued at £20, besides 7 cows and 3
calves valued at £12. (fn. 221) On a farm in Burntwood
in 1677 4 cows, 3 heifers, and a yearling calf
were valued at £8 16s. 8d.; 20 sheep, a fat hog,
and two stalls of bees were together worth £6. (fn. 222)
Bees were mentioned at Woodhouses in 1671
and at Burntwood in 1678. (fn. 223)
Sheep farming remained important in
Burntwood, with farmers grazing their flocks on
the heath until its inclosure in 1861. (fn. 224) Animals
offered for sale at Maple Hayes in 1803 included
51 fat sheep, 104 ewes, 126 hoggets, and 3 rams;
there were also 15 cows in calf, 3 barren cows, 10
heifers, 10 stirks, 11 yearling cows, and a bull. (fn. 225)
In 1809 the warrener at the lodge north-west of
Boney Hay kept a farm where there were 78
ewes, wethers, and lambs, 6 cows and heifers in
calf, 2 stirks, and 3 calves. (fn. 226) The stock offered
for sale at Pipe Hall farm in 1821 included some
100 Leicester ewes and theaves in lamb, some
100 ewe and wether hogs, and 120 fat sheep
besides an unspecified number of Longhorn
cattle. (fn. 227) Sheep for sale at Maple Hayes in 1829
consisted of 103 Leicester ewes in lamb, 71 ewe
and wether hogs, and 2 Leicester rams; the other
animals were 6 cows, 3 horses, and 20 pigs. (fn. 228) At
Hill farm in 1871 there were 100 sheep, 11
cattle, 4 horses, and upwards of 21 pigs, and
stock offered for sale at Edial in 1893 included
201 Shropshire sheep and 21 head of cattle. (fn. 229) In
1984 the livestock officially recorded in
Burntwood parish consisted of 629 cattle and
calves, 1,410 pigs, 3,636 sheep and lambs, and
93 hens and pullets with 3 cocks and cockerels
for breeding. (fn. 230)
Park, warrens, and fisheries.
By 1498 the lord
of Pipe had a park south-east of Pipe Hall. (fn. 231) A
piece of land south of the hall called the Park
was measured at 26 a. in 1689. (fn. 232) By 1690 the
park had evidently been divided into three, the
great park, the little park, and 'the park next the
house or conygrey'. (fn. 233) In 1844 three fields south
and south-east of the hall were known as Little,
Middle, and Great Park. (fn. 234)
The prioress of Farewell had a warren at
Ashmore Brook in 1418; land there was known
as the Conigree in the mid 17th century. (fn. 235) At
Edial in 1608 there were closes called the Cunnyngryes, a name which survived as the Connigrees in 1704. (fn. 236) A warren with a lodge north-west of Boney Hay was destroyed in the attack
on the Cannock Chase warrens by local inhabitants in the winter of 1753–4, but it was subsequently restocked. (fn. 237) The Mr. Derry whose
farming stock was advertised for sale in 1809
after his death was succeeded as warrener there
by James Derry. James was living at the lodge in
1822 and was still warrener in 1851 when he was
also farming 8 a. attached to the lodge. (fn. 238) The
warren evidently survived until the inclosure of
1861. (fn. 239) The lodge survives as Coney Lodge
Farm and contains a roof truss, perhaps of the
17th century, which was once part of a small
timber-framed building. By the later 18th century the house was of brick and two bays long,
and it was extended in the 19th century. (fn. 240)
Sir Humphrey Stanley had a fishery at Pipe in
1490, when he accused Thomas Godsale of
Lichfield of stealing pike, tench, roach, and
perch from it. (fn. 241) In 1734 John Biddulph leased
3 a. of boggy ground along Big Crane brook on
the north-west boundary of Burntwood to make
two pools, one of them for fish. A pool called
Biddulph's Pool survives there; in the early 19th
century it was also known as Lichfield heath
pool. (fn. 242)
Mills.
A mill at Ashmore Brook belonging to
the lord of Pipe in 1286 and evidently still in use
in 1330 (fn. 243) may have been Abnalls mill, which was
in decay in 1420. (fn. 244) A millward was living at
Abnalls in 1340, (fn. 245) and a mill formed part of the
estate centring on Abnalls which was held by
Nicholas Taverner in 1357. (fn. 246) There may have
been a mill on Leamonsley brook on or near the
site of the late 18th-century fulling mill on the
Burntwood-Lichfield boundary: in 1427 there
was a Mill Lane in the area. (fn. 247)
There was a mill in Burntwood in 1690 called
New Pool mill; it probably stood on Redmoor
brook north of Boney Hay where there was a
new pool in 1597. (fn. 248) Coney mill stood on Redmoor brook in that area in 1775. It was still in
use in 1824 but had ceased to work by the mid
1830s. A house survived there, and the site of
the pool became arable. (fn. 249)
There was a mill at Edial in 1666. (fn. 250)
Markets.
By 1869 an open-air market was held
on Fridays behind the Uxbridge Arms in
Church Street, Chasetown. It was still an outdoor market in 1900, but a market hall existed
there in 1915. (fn. 251) In the 1920s an open-air market
was held in the yard of the Victoria public house
in Ironstone Road, Chase Terrace. (fn. 252) In 1970 the
Graysin Group started a Saturday market on the
car park behind the new shopping centre on the
north side of Cannock Road at Sankey's Corner.
It was held on Fridays also by 1986. That year
permission was given on a trial basis for 16 stalls
two days a week in front of the centre, and in
1988 the market was made permanent. (fn. 253) An
open-air market by Burntwood recreation centre
was held on Thursday evenings during the
summer in 1982 and 1983. Local traders protested, and permission was withheld in 1984. (fn. 254)
Coalmining.
Coal pits, probably west of Hobstone Hill, were mentioned in the early 1650s, (fn. 255)
and c. 1700 an inhabitant of Edial was dealing in
coals. (fn. 256) Thomas Fairley, who went to live in the
Burntwood area in 1768, was described as a
collier in 1770. (fn. 257)
In the early 1840s the 1st marquess of Anglesey was investigating the possibility of largescale mining along the Eastern Boundary Fault
of the Cannock Chase Coalfield in the vicinity of
Norton Pool. Boring had been carried out by
1847 near the eastern dam of the pool on the
Hammerwich side of the boundary. (fn. 258) That year
conditions for leasing the minerals in the area
were drawn up, but potential investors were
deterred by the lack of transport. (fn. 259) In 1849 the
marquess sank a pit (known as the Marquess)
near the dam, and the first coal was drawn in
December. (fn. 260) The Anglesey Branch Canal, incorporating a feeder from Norton Pool, was cut
in 1850 to link the pit with the Wyrley and
Essington Canal in Ogley Hay. (fn. 261) In May 1852
the Shallow Coal was reached in a second pit,
the Uxbridge, nearby on the Burntwood side of
the boundary; also called the Cathedral, it became known as the Fly from the speed of
winding. (fn. 262) By October some 200 tons of coal a
day were being sold from the colliery, and Lord
Anglesey's agent wrote of 'the quantity of boats
always waiting at Hammerwich for loading'. (fn. 263)
In the same year a railway was built from the
colliery to the South Staffordshire Railway (fn. 264) and
offices were built near the Uxbridge pit. (fn. 265) A new
pit was opened evidently in the earlier part of
1854; later known as no. 4, it lay north-east of
the Uxbridge (no. 2). (fn. 266)
Lord Anglesey advertised the colliery for letting in 1853. (fn. 267) In 1854 he made an agreement
with Richard Croft Chawner of Wall, chairman
of the South Staffordshire Railway Co. and of
the South Staffordshire Waterworks Co., and
John Robinson McClean, engineer and lessee of
the railway and engineer of the waterworks.
They were to have a lease of the colliery and of
mineral rights under 2,000 a. on Cannock Chase
for 31 years. Lord Anglesey died before the lease
was signed, but Chawner and McClean had
already been given possession. A retrospective
lease from 1854 was made by the 2nd marquess
in 1858. (fn. 268) Meanwhile the original Hammerwich
pit ceased working in 1856. (fn. 269) To raise additional
capital and extend operations the two lessees
formed the Cannock Chase Colliery Co. in 1859.
They held most of the ordinary shares, and
McClean, the principal shareholder, was appointed managing director. (fn. 270) On his death in
1873 his son Frank was appointed in his place;
he resigned in 1877 after a disagreement with
the board of directors over policy. (fn. 271)
A new pit (no. 3, also known as the Preference
and as the Plant) was being sunk in 1859 south
of the Cannock road near the parish boundary.
It evidently began production in 1861. (fn. 272) No. 5,
north-east of no. 3, was being sunk in 1861, and
the Deep Coal was evidently reached early in
1863. (fn. 273) The company's four pits were employing nearly 2,000 men and boys in 1865 and
produced 12,000 tons a week during the winter;
each had its branch railway. (fn. 274) In 1867 the main
railway was extended as the Cannock Chase &
Wolverhampton Railway to join lines in Cannock and Norton Canes; the colliery, already
connected with the South Staffordshire Railway was thus given a connexion with the
London & North Western Railway at Rugeley. (fn. 275)
In the same year Lord Anglesey granted a new
lease. (fn. 276) By then the company was extending its
operations into Cannock. (fn. 277)
In 1883 Arthur Sopwith, engineer and general
manager of the company from 1873, introduced
electricity at no. 2 pit. A claim that it was the
first in the world to be so lit has been refuted in
favour of a pit at Hamilton (Lanarks.), lit in
1882. The supply had been extended to no. 3 by
1907. A power station was opened at no. 5 in
1908, and by 1912 all the company's pits except
one in Cannock were supplied. (fn. 278) Sopwith was
succeeded by his son Shelford in 1918. (fn. 279)
No. 4 pit was disused by 1883. (fn. 280) In 1907 no. 2
was employing 251 men underground and 95
above, and nos. 3 and 5 together had 684 underground and 322 above. (fn. 281) Work stopped at no. 5
some time c. 1919. (fn. 282) No. 2 ceased to be a
drawing pit in 1923; instead an inclined ropeway
known as the Drift took the coal up to the canal.
Production there stopped in 1940. (fn. 283) No. 3 was
reconstructed as the centre of the colliery in the
1920s and continued in operation until 1959. (fn. 284)
With its closure mining in Burntwood came to
an end. Workshops opened there in 1924 and
reorganized in 1957 have continued as the National Coal Board's area workshops. (fn. 285)
Other industries.
There was a locksmith at
Edial in 1624 (fn. 286) and a pinmaker at Woodhouses
in 1663. (fn. 287) A buckle maker settled at either Edial
or Woodhouses in 1772. (fn. 288) Nailing was the most
important metal industry. A nailer named John
Tymnis or Tymons was living at Burntwood in
1651 and 1664, (fn. 289) and another named Richard
Biddulph died there in 1670. (fn. 290) There were several references to nailers at Burntwood in the
18th century. (fn. 291) There was a nailshop at Woodhouses in 1819, and the seven in Burntwood in
the earlier 1820s stood mainly west of the green
and around Rake Hill. (fn. 292) By 1841 there was an
extensive domestic industry, employing women
and children as well as men. It was concentrated
around Burntwood itself, and in 1851 the main
areas were the green, the Cannock road, Ball
Lane, Commonside, and Ranter's Row. (fn. 293) Nailing was still important in 1861, although numbers were declining and in some families sons
were becoming miners instead. (fn. 294) By 1881 there
were only four nailers in Burntwood, with a fifth
at Woodhouses. (fn. 295) Former nailers' cottages still
stand in Farewell Lane and Rake Hill. (fn. 296)
A presentment of brickmaking on the waste at
Burntwood was made at the Longdon manor
court in 1713. (fn. 297) A band of red marl south of
Boney Hay in the area of the present Slade
Avenue has been used for brickmaking. A map
of the earlier 1820s shows Brick kiln slade, Brick
kiln pits, and Brick kiln bank on the heath there.
In 1860 it was the site of a disused brickworks
which may have been the brickworks in
Burntwood belonging to Lord Anglesey in
1854. (fn. 298) A brickmaker named Samuel Cheetham
was living at Spade Green in 1806 and was
described as a brickmaker of Woodhouses in
1813. (fn. 299) Another brickmaker named William
Robinson was living at Woodhouses in the
earlier 1830s. (fn. 300) In 1841 Elias Gilbert had a
brickworks west of Lincroft Cottage, his house
on Stafford Road on the boundary with Lichfield. He was still running it with a farm in
1861, and in 1871 both were in the hands of his
widow Mary. (fn. 301) John Tudor of Fulfin House
worked as a brickmaker as well as a farmer in the
1860s. (fn. 302) There was a brickyard on the north side
of Springlestyche Lane in 1882. (fn. 303) Bricks are said
to have been made at some time before 1918
from a band of marl south of Queen Street in
Chasetown. (fn. 304)
Walter Heveningham had a quarry near Pipe
Hall in the 1680s: under an agreement of 1685
'sound, hard quarrell stone' from it was to be
used for making a sough at the conduit head
nearby. (fn. 305) Fines were imposed at the Pipe manor
court in 1777 for quarrying stone at Edial and in
Pinfold (later Woodhouse) Lane in Woodhouses. (fn. 306) Stone was quarried on the waste at
Hobstone in the mid 1780s, and a quarry south
of Camsey Lane in the same area was being
worked at the beginning of the 20th century. (fn. 307)
There was a gravel pit straddling the boundary
with Hammerwich by Norton Pool in the earlier
1840s (fn. 308) and another on the Slade Avenue site in
the early 1880s. (fn. 309) The inclosure award of 1861
assigned just under 3 a. at Ball's Mount west of
Burntwood to the highway surveyors as a quarry
for stone and gravel for road repair. A gravel pit
there was being worked in 1921, and at some
earlier date building sand was dug to the west at
Spring Hill. (fn. 310)
Industrial estates were established from the
1960s on the site of no. 5 pit south of Cannock
Road at Chase Terrace, off Queen's Drive on the
south side of Chasetown, and off New Road in
Burntwood. (fn. 311)
LOCAL GOVERNMENT.
Manorial government.
Manorially Edial and most of
Woodhouses were within Pipe manor, but
Burntwood, a later settlement which grew up on
the waste of Longdon manor, was never part of
Pipe manor. (fn. 312) By 1293 Pipe attended Longdon
manor's view of frankpledge, held at Lichfield. (fn. 313)
It presented with Wall by 1297, and by 1327 the
tithing of Pipe and Wall was represented by four
frankpledges; there were three from 1452. (fn. 314)
From 1494 the tithing was styled Pipe (evidently
Pipehill), Wall, Edial, and Woodhouse (Woodhousen or Woodhouses from the later 16th
century). (fn. 315) Burntwood had been added to the
name by 1570. (fn. 316) Between 1559 and 1563 the
tithing was sometimes called Pipe cum membris, also the name of the constablewick, and
that style was used regularly from 1576. (fn. 317) In the
late 1630s the tithing broke into three separate
tithings, each with one frankpledge. One tithing
covered Burntwood, Edial, and Woodhouses,
another Wall, and the third Pipehill. (fn. 318) There
was still a headborough for Burntwood, Edial,
and Woodhouses in the 1830s; although an
officer of Longdon manor, he was nominated by
the Burntwood vestry. (fn. 319) The township of
Burntwood, Edial, and Woodhouses was still
summoned to the Longdon leet in 1857. (fn. 320)
The constablewick of Pipe cum membris, in
existence by the 14th century, covered the same
area as the tithing, with the constable elected at
the Longdon great court. (fn. 321) Even after the division of the tithing in the 1630s, Wall and
Pipehill remained part of the constablewick.
The constable was still an officer of Longdon
manor in the 1830s, but by the later 1820s he too
was nominated by the Burntwood vestry. (fn. 322)
The lord of Pipe had a three-weekly court in
1299. (fn. 323) He still held a court baron in 1838 and
apparently in 1857. Its meeting place was recorded as Pipe Hall from 1767. (fn. 324)
There was a pinfold in the tithing of Pipe and
Wall in 1466. (fn. 325) By the late 16th century there
was a pinfold at Woodhouses, where the present
Woodhouse Lane was known as Pinfold Lane in
the late 18th and early 19th century. (fn. 326) In 1838 it
was stated at the Pipe court that the ancient
pinfold in Pipe manor was in decay and that
Woodhouses was the most convenient place for
a new one. (fn. 327)
Part of Ashmore Brook, presumably the Abnalls area in Farewell manor, was making presentments at the Farewell view by 1290. At first
it formed a tithing with Bourne, evidently in
Longdon parish, but by 1341 Ashmore Brook
and Bourne presented separately. In the early
1340s Ashmore Brook was represented by two
frankpledges and in 1367 by one. (fn. 328) It was still a
tithing with one frankpledge in 1636. (fn. 329)
The estate at Edial and Woodhouses belonging to St. Radegund's chantry in Lichfield
cathedral was evidently the main possession of
the chantry manor. (fn. 330) That manor was within the
superior jurisdiction of Longdon manor, (fn. 331) but it
had its own court baron, records of which
survive from 1305. (fn. 332) The court met in the Close
at Lichfield in 1341 and in the chapel of St.
Radegund in the cathedral in the 15th and 16th
centuries. (fn. 333) In 1577 the court was held at Longdon, the Pagets having acquired both manors. (fn. 334)
The property of the former chantry still formed
a distinct accounting unit in the earlier 1620s. (fn. 335)
Parish government.
As part of the parish of St.
Michael, Lichfield, the township of Burntwood,
Edial, and Woodhouses had no wardens of its
own until the 19th century. With the opening of
Christ Church, Burntwood, in 1820 two chapel
wardens were appointed; after the creation of a
separate parish in 1845 two churchwardens were
appointed. (fn. 336) There was a sidesman for each of
the hamlets of Burntwood, Edial, and Woodhouses by 1637. From 1733 Edial shared a
sidesman with Pipehill, but by 1792 it had its
own again. The sidesmen ceased to be appointed
after 1865. (fn. 337)
Each of the hamlets had its own overseer of
the poor by 1674. (fn. 338) Three separate overseers
continued to be appointed until 1700 when the
inhabitants agreed that there should be a single
overseer, chosen in rotation from Woodhouses,
Edial, and Burntwood in that order. (fn. 339) By 1813
there were two overseers. (fn. 340) A paid assistant was
appointed in 1835. (fn. 341) By 1824 there was a select
vestry, elected for the last time in 1834. (fn. 342)
From the late 18th century the overseers
owned three cottages at Woodhouses which they
used as poorhouses. A meeting of ratepayers of
the township in 1838 authorized the guardians
of Lichfield poor law union to sell them. (fn. 343)
Between 1819 and 1829 the overseers paid £4 4s.
rent in respect of the workhouse at Norton
Canes, presumably in return for being allowed
to send paupers there. (fn. 344)
Under the Burntwood inclosure award of
1861 the churchwardens and overseers were
assigned 4 a. at Ball's Mount for the benefit of
the labouring poor, subject to a rent charge of
£2. The land was settled on trustees in 1864 and
divided into 16 holdings, which were let at a rent
of 5s. each. The surplus income was used in aid
of the poor rates. (fn. 345)
By 1637 a surveyor of the highways was
elected for each of the three hamlets. (fn. 346) All three
surveyors were salaried by the late 19th century. (fn. 347)
The township was included in Lichfield poor
law union, formed in 1836. (fn. 348) It was recognized
as a civil parish in the later 19th century, (fn. 349) and
its name was changed from Burntwood, Edial,
and Woodhouses to Burntwood in 1929. (fn. 350) In
1969 the meetings of the parish council were
transferred from Chase Terrace comprehensive
school to the committee room at the newly
opened baths. (fn. 351)
Having been part of Lichfield rural district,
Burntwood became an urban parish in the new
Lichfield district in 1974, with its council styled
a town council. (fn. 352) The council offices were
moved in 1983 from the recreation centre to
temporary accommodation in Bridge Cross
Road at Sankey's Corner and in 1986 into a
building there which also contains shops, other
offices, and a snooker hall. The building was
named Lambourne House in 1987 in memory of
Ernie Lambourne, a member of the council
1976–84. (fn. 353)
PUBLIC SERVICES.
In 1870 a meeting of
ratepayers of the township of Burntwood, Edial,
and Woodhouses, concerned at the state of
drainage in Chasetown, agreed to lay a sewer
along Queen Street, discharging into a field. (fn. 354)
An inspector of nuisances was appointed for the
township in 1872. (fn. 355) In 1877 an inspecting committee of ratepayers found the sanitary condition of Chasetown 'not very bad': the streets
were kept clean, and there was surface sewering.
In Chase Terrace and Boney Hay, on the other
hand, they found some streets 'a foot deep in
mud, ashes, and sewage', and the ratepayers
decided to introduce sewering. (fn. 356) In 1880 a meeting agreed to undertake the sewerage of those
parts of Chasetown not yet served. (fn. 357) The drainage of the southern part of Ironstone Road in
Chase Terrace was agreed in 1891, from Eastgate Street to Cannock Road. (fn. 358)
In the rural part of the township in 1892 the
medical officer of health of the district found the
sanitary state of Woodhouses 'as bad as it can
be'. A particular problem was the scarcity of
pure water. The supply came mainly from three
roadside wells. The best was only three feet
deep, but it was bricked round and covered with
wood; the other two were 'mere open holes by
the side of the road ... fouled by the wet and all
sorts of rubbish being thrown into them'. (fn. 359)
In 1898 Chasetown's sewerage was remodelled and a sewage works was opened south of
Queen Street on the Hammerwich side of the
boundary; it remained in use until the late
1960s. (fn. 360) Another works was opened east of
Rugeley Road at Chase Terrace in 1906. (fn. 361) A
sewerage scheme for Burntwood was begun in
1914 and completed in 1919. (fn. 362) Water closets
were the norm in Chasetown and Chase Terrace
by 1920 and in Burntwood by 1925. Water was
supplied by the South Staffordshire Waterworks
Co. which had built a pumping station in Chorley Road in 1913. (fn. 363) Public collection of refuse
was started in the parish in 1920. (fn. 364) A sewage
works was opened in Peter's Lane at Edial in
1930, replacing the works at Chase Terrace. (fn. 365)
By 1935 there were 110 council houses in the
parish, and slum clearance was in progress.
There were 202 council houses by 1938, 50 of
them built that year in the Boney Hay part of
Chorley Road. (fn. 366) Building was resumed after the
Second World War, the first new house being
opened in Rugeley Road, Chase Terrace, in
1946. The Oakdene estate at Chasetown, begun
soon afterwards, was by 1958 the largest council
estate in Lichfield rural district. (fn. 367)
The area is served by Hammerwich Cottage
Hospital, opened in 1882. (fn. 368) The Annie Ker
Gettings Memorial Home in Bridge Cross Road
at Sankey's Corner was opened in 1923 as a
district nurses' home. It was named in memory
of Annie Ker (d. 1920), who was matron of the
cottage hospital for several years until her marriage to J. S. Gettings, a surgeon who worked at
the hospital from its opening until shortly before
his death in 1928. During the First World War
she was commandant of a military ward at the
hospital. Much of the cost of building the home
was met with money raised to support the
military ward and with the Burntwood and
Hammerwich Parishes War Fund established in
1919 by Mrs. Gettings' efforts. The home was
closed apparently in 1951, and in 1987 the
building was used as a wine bar and night club. (fn. 369)
The Oakdene day centre in Sycamore Road for
the elderly and the handicapped was opened in
1988. (fn. 370)
A county asylum for pauper lunatics was
opened on an estate of over 94 a. on Hobstone
Hill north-west of Woodhouses in 1864. It was
designed by W. L. Moffatt of Edinburgh. The
part then completed consisted of the central
block, including a chapel, and the west wing
containing the male wards, with a portion partitioned off for female patients. (fn. 371) The east wing
containing the female wards was completed in
1868. (fn. 372) A burial ground was consecrated in 1867
and extended in 1904. It remained in use until
the 1920s, and its chapel was demolished in the
1960s. (fn. 373) In 1871 there were 491 patients and a
staff of 4 officers, 41 attendants and nurses, and
5 artisans. (fn. 374) There have been many extensions,
notably in the later 1890s and the mid 1930s. A
detached chapel was opened in 1900, and a
nurses' home was built in 1914. (fn. 375) The name St.
Matthew's was adopted in 1947. (fn. 376) From 1940 to
1947 there was an emergency hospital on the site
for both military and civilian patients; part of
the asylum was taken over, and new wards were
built in the grounds. The first patients were 242
sick and wounded rescued from the Dunkirk
beaches. (fn. 377)
Policing was undertaken by the township authorities in the earlier 19th century. Stocks were
set up near the Nag's Head inn at Fulfen in
1809. (fn. 378) A lock and key for handcuffs were
bought in 1823 and a constable's staff in 1832. (fn. 379)
In December 1829 the select vestry ordered the
headborough to 'attend the village of Woodhouses on Sunday evening for the purpose of
detecting disorderly people that frequent that
quarter'. (fn. 380) The constable's activities in 1831–2
included 'routing gypsies at the over end of
Burntwood' and 'going round the public
houses'; his expenses were paid by the township. (fn. 381) In 1871 there was a police constable
lodging in Chasetown and another living in
Edial. (fn. 382) A police station consisting of two houses
was built in High Street, Chasetown, about the
end of 1873; two constables were living there in
1881. About 1927 the two houses were converted into one, which was occupied by the
officer in charge and included office accommodation. A new station was opened in 1963 on a
site behind the old building, which was demolished; houses were built there for the sergeant in
charge and two other officers. (fn. 383) Burntwood had
a station in Cannock Road by 1896, and there
was another at Chase Terrace by 1912. (fn. 384) The
Chasetown station is the headquarters of a section covering all three areas. (fn. 385)
A fire station was opened in Rugeley Road,
Chase Terrace, in 1969. (fn. 386)
A gasworks was built south of Queen Street,
Chasetown, in 1870 by the Chasetown Gas Co.
Ltd. It remained in use until c. 1952. (fn. 387) When
electricity was introduced at the Cannock Chase
Colliery Co.'s no. 2 pit in Chasetown in 1883,
the supply was extended to the church, the
nearby school, and the manager's house. When
the Chasetown Institute was opened in 1888, it
too was lit by electricity. In 1922 the colliery
company erected street lamps in Chasetown,
Chase Terrace, and Boney Hay and supplied
them with electricity generated at the power
station built at no. 5 pit in 1908; it also built
substations at Chasetown and Chase Terrace.
Whereas the streets of Chasetown had been lit
by gas, Chase Terrace and Boney Hay had
depended mainly on oil lamps. The electricity
was sold to private customers. (fn. 388) Lichfield corporation's supply was extended to the eastern part
of Burntwood parish in 1927. (fn. 389) In 1929 the
colliery company transferred its electricity operations to the Chasetown and District Electricity
Co. Ltd. which was later taken over by the West
Midlands Joint Electricity Authority. The
power station at no. 5 pit ceased generating in
1942–3. (fn. 390)
The master of Burntwood school was also
acting as post master by 1850; letters were
carried on foot to and from Lichfield. (fn. 391) The
master was still keeping the post office in 1854,
but in the 1860s Thomas Hodson, a nailer of
Norton Lane, kept it. (fn. 392) There was a post office at
Chasetown by 1868 and one at Chase Terrace by
1884. (fn. 393)
In the early 20th century horse-drawn buses
ran between Chasetown and Chase Terrace and
between the White Swan, Burntwood, and
Chasetown. Both services continued until 1924.
There were also buses on Fridays from the
White Swan to Lichfield. The first motor bus
was introduced in 1913 by the London & North
Western Railway to run between Brownhills
station and Chasetown. (fn. 394)
Eizabeth Ball's charitable bequests by will
proved 1770 included £100 for building a hearse
house on the waste at Fulfen or Burntwood and
for buying a hearse for use by the township and
by Hammerwich. (fn. 395) It is not known whether
those intentions were carried out.